Common Names

Origin

Native to southern Africa.

Naturalised Distribution

A very widely naturalised species that is mainly found throughout the southern and eastern parts of Australia. It is very common in southern Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, the ACT, south-eastern South Australia and south-western Western Australia. Also relatively common or occasionally naturalised in central and northern Queensland, Tasmania, in other parts of South Australia and Western Australia, in the southern parts of the Northern Territory, and on Lord Howe Island.

Notes

Common peppercress (Lepidium africanum) is regarded as an environmental weed in Victoria and as a potential environmental weed in Western Australia and the Northern Territory. This species is a common weed of agricultural areas and habitation (i.e. crops, pastures, lawns, gardens, footpaths, parks, roadsides, disturbed sites and waste areas). However, it also invades open woodlands, grasslands and wetlands in some parts of the country.

Common peppercress (Lepidium africanum) is currently of most concern in Victoria, where it is regarded as a potential threat to one or more vegetation communities. It is a common weed of grassy woodlands and plains grasslands in some parts of the state, including in numerous conservation areas (e.g. Wanurp Nature Conservation Reserve, Yarra Bend Park, Roslynmead Nature Conservation Reserve, Organ Pipes National Park and Brisbane Ranges National Park).

This species is a common weed of buloke (Allocasuarina luehmannii) woodlands, an endangered ecological community found in some parts of western Victoria and south-western New South Wales. This plant community is itself an important source of food for the endangered south-eastern red-tailed black cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus banksii graptogyne) in western Victoria.

Common peppercress (Lepidium africanum) is also a weed of woodlands in other parts of New South Wales, a weed of wastelands and road verges from Geraldton to Esperance in south-western Western Australia, and a potential weed of arid wetlands in the southern parts of the Northern Territory. It has also been recorded in conservation areas in South Australia (i.e. Angove Conservation Park, Scott Creek Conservation Park and Anstey Hill Recreation Park) and New South Wales (i.e. Irrawong Reserve).

Fact sheets are available from Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation (DEEDI) service centres and our Customer Service Centre (telephone 13 25 23). Check our website at www.biosecurity.qld.gov.au
to ensure you have the latest version of this fact sheet. The control methods referred to in this fact sheet should be used in accordance with the restrictions (federal and state legislation, and local government laws) directly or indirectly related to each control method.
These restrictions may prevent the use of one or more of the methods referred to, depending on individual circumstances. While every care is taken to ensure the accuracy of this information, DEEDI does not invite reliance upon it, nor accept responsibility for any loss or damage caused by actions based on it.